The
Wonderful Wizard of Oz
by L. Frank
Baum
Illustrated by William Wallace Denslow
Introduction and Notes by J. T. Barbarese
When
someone says The Wizard of Oz, many
thoughts are conjured up in one’s mind. Ruby red shoes that Dorothy wears,
which were the wicked Witches of the East, until her untimely death after Dorothy’s
house falls upon her, killing her instantly. Dorothy’s three comrades, a
scarecrow, a tin man, and a lion, who accompanies her on her journey to get
back home. In addition, the song, Somewhere Over the Rainbow sung by Dorothy (Judy
Garland), which of course was only in the movie.
Though
the movie is great, the book is different in many ways, but has some aspects of
the movie, keeping it true to the story version, which makes the book great
too.
The Wizard of Oz
is an iconic movie,[1]
which was released on 25 August 1939 (USA). The
Wonderful Wizard of Oz, published on 17 May 1900, created a firm foundation
making it an iconic book.
The Storyline: Dorothy and her dog Toto are taken to a magical land called Oz by a twister. Where all she wants to do is, get back to Kansas to Aunt Em and Uncle Henry, but she has to travel to the Emerald City to find Oz. Dorothy makes friends with a scarecrow, Woodman man, and Lion, during her journey. The scarecrow, Wooden man, and lion also hope that the Great Wizard of Oz can grant them their wishes too. The scarecrow wants a brain. The Wooden man wants a heart, and the cowardly lion wants courage.
The Storyline: Dorothy and her dog Toto are taken to a magical land called Oz by a twister. Where all she wants to do is, get back to Kansas to Aunt Em and Uncle Henry, but she has to travel to the Emerald City to find Oz. Dorothy makes friends with a scarecrow, Woodman man, and Lion, during her journey. The scarecrow, Wooden man, and lion also hope that the Great Wizard of Oz can grant them their wishes too. The scarecrow wants a brain. The Wooden man wants a heart, and the cowardly lion wants courage.
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, by L. Frank Baum (1900), is considered one of the first American Children’s books, which has the first true American child protagonists.
A few things that are the same from the book to the movie is there are still The Munchkins, who live in Munchkin Land, that she first encounters after the cyclone (in the movie it’s called a twister), carried Dorothy and Toto far away from Kansas. However, the Lollipop Guild and the Lullaby Guild aren’t in the book at all. However, one could imagine they are still in the book version too, even though there is no mention of these two groups of munchkins.
Her three companions the scarecrow, the lion, and the wooden man (in the movie the wooden man is a tin man), still rusts and has to use an oilcan on his joins to be able to move. These three characters help her on her quest.
There are shoes that Dorothy wears, but instead of the
shoes being ruby red shoes. They are silver shoes. The ruby red shoes were for
the movie version because colour film has just started to be used in movies. The Wizard of Oz was the first movie to employ
both black and white and coloured in a movie.
The Emerald City was still green, but not because it was truly emerald green. Everyone, who lived in the city, had to wear spectacles, which were tinted, green, which made everything look green.
Furthermore, the book instead of just having two witches, the Wicked Witch of the East and Glenda the Good Witch of the North, there are actually four witches. Each witch represented the four cardinal directions: North, South, East, and West.
I personally recommend The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum, because it’s a Classic. Goodreads classifies the book as a classic, fantasy, and adventure. The Illustrations enhance the images that the readers have in their minds making the book come alive. The book gives readers more of a sense of a continuous timeline and how Dorothy’s journey took awhile before she returned home. As the movie version says…
“There is No Place Like Home.”
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